Movie Theater Pays $10,000 Damages In Snack Search Lawsuit

What ruins your movie-going experience more than being searched for surreptitious snacks? Having your mom discover that you’re taking birth control pills when movie theater employees go through your purse.

This happened to a family in Montreal, Canada, and their solution was to sue the theater for $60,000 (54,942.86 USD)

Staff at the theatre were searching customers’ bags for video equipment that could be used for movie piracy.

Security guards didn’t find any video equipment in the family’s bags, but did turn up a large selection of snack food, which they asked the family to take back to their vehicle, Lurie said.

The judge in the case ruled that theaters are within their rights to search customers’ bags, but only if the policy is made clear at the time customers buy their tickets. The family received $10,000 ($9,162 USD) in damages for the violation of their privacy.

Yeah, nothing at all to worry about in Canada..except that little recession that’s going on up here too, and the fact that we up here worry about people in other countries as well.

The fact that one movie theatre in Canada was strict with its policy doesn’t mean all of them are. The movie theatres in my city don’t really seem to care, though I don’t advertise that I’m taking Subway into the theatre with me.

@Joeb5:
some places here (long island, ny) are stricter than others
luckily, my favorite theater really doesn’t care when i walk in with food
i’ve brought my entire dinner in with me one time.
i also brought a box of pizza during a matinee … they actually told me the only reason they were letting me in is cuz there wasnt really anyone around to see them do it.

@Joeb5: while i’ve never seen customers searched for sneaking in candy, i worked at a theater for about 3 years during high school and no movie theater willingly allows its patrons to bring outside food in to their movie, US or canada

@uncle moe: Those policies changed awhile back. I worked for AMC for about four years when I was a kid. They got sued for not letting a diabetic bring in her water and banana….and abolished that little policy. :x

@uncle moe: @Gramin: Err, I’m confused. If no theatre would ever allow outside food… why did the head of Empire Theatres (the primary Atlantic Canada chain, subsidiary of one of the big guys) state on-record to the press that there’s no policy barring outside food as long as it’s not disruptive (ie, ten tons of trash, noisy, or smelly)?

That said, bringing it in openly would take the fun out of seeing how much you can smuggle in without being obvious.

@Joeb5: Almost forgot to note – this isn’t Canada caring about it, it’s Montreal. Montreal is pretty much the inversion of the Canadian stereotype – I’ve never seen so many angry Francophones in one place. Then again, they’re probably justified in their anger, inasmuch as that they have to drive on Montreal.

I used to be more frightened of bringing candy into theaters as a kid but when I do it now I feel fine doing it. I’ve never seen any movie theater have a sign posted saying bags will be searched, and you can bet I would put up a fight if they tried (without a sign).

As for the discovery of birth control, the article doesn’t seem to say how old the “older daughter” is but as a parent I would at least be happy that she was taking the proper precautions.

And, as for this statement:

“And we’re not allowed to put our hands in your bag, which is totally understandable. I don’t want to put my hands in your bag. In fact, leave the bags in the car.”

This is great. Just leave your purse in the car in a parking lot where vandals know that car is going to sit there unattended for multiple hours at a time. Theaters just need to come to terms with the fact that people aren’t going to spend $4 on an 89 cent bag of Skittles.

@ajlei: C’mon, it’s Canada.
Potential car thieves leave a nicely-penned note under the wiper asking, “Is it okay if we take a quick look? Please?!” With a Yes/No checkbox and an RSVP space for a time and location that’s convenient for all concerned.
And the follow-up Thank You note? Absurdly elaborate.

@Trai_Dep: Haha.. I don’t want to be stereotypical but that seems a little too close to be made up. No, some friends and I drove up to Vancouver, BC when we were 19 to go drinking (we were already up in Bellingham, WA, or even I would have found it excessive to drive there) for the night and after getting completely wasted and pretty much dragging our friend through the streets while we asked people directions back to our hotel, everyone was helpful and we did not get mugged or attacked or anything. Plus the hotel we were in had a very popular gay bar on the bottom floor so there were all sorts of fun and exciting people coming through.

@ajlei: Even though I’m a firm supporter of birth control, I don’t think I’d choose the middle of a movie-theater lobby to find out that my (hypothetical) daughter was probably having sex. Especially since I’d be finding out along with my other family members, the theater employee searching the bag, and anybody who happened to be standing close enough to see what was going on. “How great that she’s being responsible” would probably be the thought furthest from my mind at that moment.

@nakedscience: I would guess that if you were taking the pill because you had endometriosis or something, then you would have told your mom about your problem, she would have taken you to the gyno, and then you would have gotten the Rx. I think if you are taking it for health problems, mom knows. If you are taking it because you are/are thinking of becoming sexually active, not so much.

Sorry, but no pimply faced theater employee is EVER searching me or anything on my person. They are not the police and I am not getting on a plane.
This piracy crap has been elevated to a level of idiocy that is beyond belief.

@Wombatish: Well, go to a different theater, or try to change the law. But if it’s the law, and you’re informed before you buy tickets and such, they’re being reasonable about it, as unreasonable as the thing they want to do may be.

That’s just it, though. Do the theaters actually say that they have the right? I know that I’ve never been to a theater that has publicly posted that buying a ticket means you agree to allow theater staff to search through your belongings.

@Girtych: As it is private property, yes, it is within their legal right to search.

Presumably posted signs to that effect wouldn’t be necessary either, though that does seem to be a part of the judge’s ruling. So long as the theater offers a full refund if the search is refused and the patrons are shown the door.

I think the real issue though was the impracticality of the daughter refusing the search after her parents already consented to it. Is she supposed to cool her heels in the parking lot alone for two hours while the remainder of the family enjoys the movie, or is she then supposed to convince them to also refuse the search and all leave together?

It could have been worse for her though, Imagine instead of birth control, she had a baggie of pot in her purse? Not as big of a deal in Canada as in the US, but either way would have probably caused even more embarrassment, and made it quite awkward to file a suit over the incident.

@mianne: don’t know what the laws are in canada – but disney makes it pretty clear that they do a bag check at every point before you purchase tickets. i worked there in 2001 and the bag checks started september 12th. they didn’t put signs up at first and then they were forced to.
they do the bag checks before you go through the gate though, so that if you purchased, then saw the bag check and objected, you could get your refund. and if it’s been less than an hour you could even get a refund for the price of parking.

Again, an interesting case could be made for a child refusing a search that their parents’ consented to. But reading your post made me wonder about a suit seeking refund of hotel, airfare and other related expenses if a prospective patron built a case that they made a trip specifically to visit a Disney park, were unaware of the bag search, and refused it.

I’d ask for a Consumerist to volunteer for this project, but reading this post unfortunately prevents you from honestly claiming you were unaware of their policy.

@mianne: unless something changed since i quit working in disney guest relations in 2004, there’s no fingerprint scan. i think maybe you mean the biometric reader? if you are thinking of the little machine at the ticket reader where you put your index and middle fingers in when you swipe your ticket
– it measures the length and width of your finger bones.
there’s been a real problem with people “renting out” their annual passes for a long time and that helps [not completely] defeats that.

think about it…. thousands of people a day putting there fingers on the scanner and it never gets cleaned? it would be a nightmare to get a clear fingerprint off that

@Girtych: Private Property. They can do almost anything they want as long as you consent to it (you consent by not leaving) and it’s not blatantly illegal.

And all I’m saying that if random theater A wants to search people’s bags, and they let you know ahead of time, random theater A is within their rights. I’m also within my rights to go to random theater B instead, since they don’t search bags.

And yeah, I do think they should be required to post notification of possible search before you buy tickets. And post it -obviously-, not discretely.

Personally, it would hurt their business to do searches, since I seriously doubt 100% of theaters will ever search in the good ol’ USA.

Movie theaters, it seems, have gotten a lot more lenient about “outside food”. I remember in the early 90’s we had to sneak food in a diaper bag or my grandmother’s purse because they would “search” you and/or ask you what is in the bag. Now, theaters must be greatful that people are still buying tickets. I have been able to walk right in carrying bags from the neighboring grocery store stuffed with food in plain sight (I usually still end up buying theater popcorn though–anything store bought isn’t quite the same)
.

@mbz32190: I’ve never had a problem taking my own food into theaters. That might be because I’ve been going to small town podunk theaters all my life, but I didn’t even know they could search your bags for that stuff.

Everyone needs to take a deep breath. Now, read carefully. This occurred in CANADA, not in the United States. They have different laws there. If you don’t like it, don’t visit.

That said, I’m not convinced that this wouldn’t pass muster in the US. Private businesses should have the right to search you if they want. You retain the right to refuse to do business with them. If you don’t want to be searched, don’t patronize their theater.

@Esquire99: I agree with you, if it’s their policy and people submit willingly before going in, that’s fine.

However, I still don’t think it’s a good policy for theater owners to implement. There are way too many bad things that can happen.

Think about it – you pay some kids minimum wage to work at your theater and you’re going to give them the responsibility to make the correct decisions about how to search people and their belongings? Looking in women’s purses and in people’s coats?

Some states have concealed carry…they’re going to find legally carried guns. Then what? They don’t know they’re legal. Are they going to out someone? Call the cops every time? What happens when the teenage employee’s parents find out they’re finding guns at work?

And searching people’s children? How long is it going to take for some little girl’s parents to claim a dropout teenager felt the kid up during one of these searches for candy?

>Some states have concealed carry…they’re going to find legally carried guns. Then what?

Post a large sign “ABSOLUTELY NO FIREARMS PERMITTED ON THE PREMISES. NO EXCEPTIONS. VIOLATORS WILL BE SHOT.”?

Okay, not the last part, but I’m pretty sure CCW permits are only valid in all public places and private places that don’t specifically deny them. I can’t imagine a movie theatre (or, quite frankly, most retail establishments) losing business by losing business from people packing heat.

I don’t think many theater managers are going to think about that aspect of it (finding legal firearms) until after the first time it happens (or the second, or the third, or whenever his employees decide to say something). And even after that, some states have very specific signage requirements the manager would have to research and spend time and money to implement correctly.

@Canino: I’m pretty sure that if a Canadian ran into some foreigner insisting on carrying a loaded, concealed firearm into a pitch-black area packed with children and civilians, they’d tase the person, institutionalize them, then tase them again, just for the Hell of it.

@Trai_Dep: Why is it that every thread that gets stretched to concealed carry you turn up and freak out about guns being around children? A responsible gun owner is not going to harm a child by being near it with a loaded gun.

I also don’t understand why you brought up Canada in this thread. The story from the article happened in Canada, but this thread was started by Esquire99 bringing up the issues that might surround a similar case in the US.

@secret_curse: Because I’m a common-sense guy, and much regret is avoided by avoiding bad situations before they occur. It’s something you learn pretty quickly growing up and living in the Big City.
C’mon, realistically: when was the last time Red Dawn happened, for real, from a darkened room packed with kids? You guys operate on such a weird, paranoic world populated by way too many Steven Seagal characters.

If they were searching for recording equipment than a simple opening of the bag should have been sufficient.
When the bag was opened and they saw a mound of food they were within their rights to say leave that in your car.

What I don’t understand is why the employee has their hand in the woman’s bag and was pulling out small individual items for inspection.

@lordargent: We have theaters in Texas that specifically have tables and menus in the theater where you can order food and beverages (Inlcuding beer/wine).. It’s really neat to do.. if only the food was better for the prices.

One of them is called the Alamo Draft House.. and the other is The Movie Tavern.

@TheDayIsMine: In North Bergen NJ (I think), there used to be on of those cheap theathers that showed slightly older movies for $2 a ticket. They also showed Bollywood films and served Indian food which I thought was funny at the time.

@TheDayIsMine: One time, my friends and I went to a really, really empty showing of a movie and there were probably…two people inside? We had gone to a Chinese restaurant before the movie, and when my friend saw there were barely any people in the theater, we sat down and he resumed eating his food.

So… the theater basically settled for 300 tubs of popcorn. Considering how many tubs of popcorn are sold on a weekend at the average chain theater, this settlement won’t even show up on the monthly P&Ls.

I prefer to support the local dinner theater. Not a chain and they serve real food! Drinks are a bit on the pricey side, but food’s fairly priced, comparable prices to AppleFridayTuesdays.

@jamesdenver: That was my thought. I can take the subway to the theater and always have a couple of energy bars in my backpack. Heck, I’ve even carried in my groceries (not much, mind you), so it’s not like they can afford to be massive pricks.

But the Boston Garden still won’t let you carry in a bag of any kind (except a purse) and they search those. It’s a real pain if you try to catch a game on the way home with your briefcase still with you.

If the theater in the city where I live EVER tried to search my fiancee’s back we would say no thanks and never return to that theater. Now that I think of it. No one I know has ever been searched for anything. I think most of them are not going to want to open up that can of lawsuit worms.

This isn’t common in Canada. Its not like you get your stuff searched every time you go see a movie…not even close. The only times I’ve ever seen anyone get their bags searched in any Toronto theatre is when going into a sneak preview/pre-screening of a movie before its general release date. If nothing else, its too time consuming to do it to everyone coming into the theatres. 20 theatres x 200-300 ppl per theatre x new showing every 2.5 hours = a shitload of bags to search. Most can’t be bothered.

This embarrassing possibility is precisely why my older sister carried a large pink* dÃ∂iÃ∂lÃ∂dÃ∂oÃ∂ personal, battery-powered device in her handbag when going to the movies with the ‘rents. Once Shamu broke for air, awkward conversations about her discrete pill-pack were completely forgotten.
* Because she’s a lady, damn it!

@Trai_Dep: Jeez, most people (well, most men) freak out at the sight of tampons in a bag. I have to get bag checks at work when I leave, and more than once a male employee will look in, and quickly look away upon sight of one. I can’t imagine the reactions a… er… personally battery-powered device would elicit.

@ajlei: I remember the first time that I went clubbing with a friend who needed to have tampons on hand but didn’t want to pack her bag, so since I was wearing cargoes, she asked me to carry them.
Momentary brain-freeze as my mind spun furiously in circles, paralyzed by Guy Brain Paralysis. Then I overcame it, shrugged and it was no problem from then on.
But yeah, don’t know why, but it’s a weird Guy Brain thing until it’s beaten with a stick. :)

Title is misleading…which is lame, they weren’t searching for snacks, they were searching for video equipment, they ended up finding snacks, but that’s irrelevant.

I dislike expensive food in theaters, but understand that is how they make their money so I support them and buy it. The theater I go to also has a concierge club (vip club) which I pay about $100/yr to be a member of that allows me to reserve seats (not just tickets, the actual seats I want for me and my guests, and we are escorted in by the usher) bypass all lines (even for premiers) and when I have gone out to eat before a show, they have put my food in their refrigerator while we enjoyed the move. I also have a unlisted number for the desk that manages this club so I get an answer when I call in under 4 rings typically.

Before having this membership I enjoyed going to the movies, but was on edge about spending so much money, now its fantastic. I see all the movies I want, with 0 hassle and all the benefits.

When I was a teenager, my friends and I would stop at Taco Bell for soft taco 6-packs on our way to the movies. We just carried them right in, never had a problem. Not saying it was right, just reminiscing.

At the independent theater the wife and I go to now, the snacks are actually from the bakery next door, and not even too pricey. You can get a decent sized cheesecake brownie and a coffee for $2.50.

@takes_so_little: yeah! We have an indie theater here that sells good-priced beer and wine and home-made baked goods for reasonable prices. It’s great! I have no problem supporting them. They also have honest-to-goodness intermissions in the middle of films too, which is great for everybody, especially in long movies where you need a bathroom break, a stretch, or a refill on your decently-priced popcorn. I wish all theaters were so thoughtful.

@takes_so_little: The only problem is that our indie theater is doing quite well, and for some reason the giant 16-screen monstrosity that’s on the clear other side of town seems to think that the indie theater is threatening competition (even though the indie theater only plays, well, uh, INDIE films that don’t come anywhere near any of the other theaters). Instead of seeing why people are supporting the theater (interesting unique movies, great atmosphere, reasonable prices, good food, beer) they instead tried all they could to get the theater shut down.

Luckily it didn’t work, but it’s still a little obnoxious and seems counter-intuitive.

Okay I HAVE to share this story – because let’s face it ALMOST EVERYONE hates the RETARDICULOUSly high prices for food at the theater and sneaks food in.

Well I call this story “HAMBURGLER”.

My brother and I did the Mickey D’s run, and had everything hidden, and are coming into this theater, and are giving our tickets to the ticket check guy, and after I make it past – my brother blows it…

The guy stops him and is like, sir, sir, open your jacket. My brother does and the burger, which he had stuffed in without its box, pops out of his jacket, hits the floor and perfectly rolls all the way down like 74 stairs and explodes at the bottom. (A drum roll and cymbal crash would be perfect here.)

I have not ever laughed so hard in my life, along with like 50 other people, because of course he had to do this in front of God and everybody.

At that point, I could have cared less about the movie, I had just received more than enough comedic value for any movie ticket.

So I went out, got our money back and consoled him, and we went back to Mickey D’s, got this ham-Burglar another burger and off to another theater we went (successfully this time).

Everybody happy – Movie Theater 1 ticket nazi did his job and saved the theater from hamburglar, we all got to die laughing at poor Mark and he got another burger past the next ticket nazi in the end.

I have a concealed carry permit. There is a little tiny sign on the door of our neighborhood cinema that prohibits bringing firearms into the theater.
Of course, we all know how expensive guns are if you buy them inside the theater — not to mention the ridiculous price of hollow-point ammo — so I bring my own.

The sign does not have “force of law” in my state, so the worst they can do if I’m discovered is ask me to leave, but I’m still concerned. If a package of birth control pills gets this much news coverage, imagine the media circus that will ensue when they find my Glock 29…

@oldgraygeek: @Coles_Law: The signs don’t have force of law where I live, either. My state constitution grants me the right to carry a firearm anywhere I damn well please with precious few exceptions. Private property owners cannot override my constitutional rights in this matter. They CAN ask me to leave, and they CAN have me officially “trespassed” meaning I can be arrested for trespassing if I return, but this all presumes they find my gun in the first place.

Yes, I carry, virtually everywhere I go and I consider signs like these to be nothing more than requests – which I ignore. They don’t know I have a gun and I won’t be consenting to any searches; if they demanded it, I’d turn tail and walk out. If they tried to detain me – well, that’s why I carry.

@jimconsumer: I completely agree with you. Free market at work. Unfortunately, it’s a very rare state that does not give the no firearm signs force of law. I can certainly tell you in KS, the signs must be obeyed at the risk of your license and possibly your freedom.

@jimconsumer: I don’t know what state you live in but I just took the CPL class in Michigan. So having just listened to a lawyer on the subject I agree that you cannot be charged with CCW on private property, however you can be prosecuted for trespassing if found to be carrying concealed (the sign is your warning, you ignore it they can take you to court). So be careful travelling outside your state as your home state laws wouldn’t apply.Also, don’t make brash statements like implying you would shoot someone for illegally detaining you. There are no states with laws that permit deadly force for being illegally detained.. you would be fasttracked to prison. It gives a bad name to everyone who carry’s concealed responsibly.

Suddenly my idea for the popcorn puffy jacket doesn’t seem like such a bad idea. Imagine it — you put the jacket in the microwave and pop the popcorn. The jacket looks puffy and will keep you warm in the winter, and you won’t get the smell of popcorn until you rip open a sleeve and dive in. Of course, there is the issue of what you wear when you leave the theater, but I’m an inventor, not some logical person.

Hm. I object to being searched, but it may be the right of the proprietor.

I think more realistic concession prices would benefit them, though. People are lazy; if they could buy candy and pop at the prices paid at any other store or restaurant, they’d just buy it at the theater, it’s convenient.

I know the proprietor SHOULDN’T HAVE to lower concession prices just to prevent, uh, smuggling, I guess? If it’s prohibited, people shouldn’t do it. But I’m more of a pragmatist. There must be some kind of law of diminishing returns for gouging at the concession stand. Sortof like, “At what price point will people refuse to buy your food and bring their own to the extent that the concession stand is no longer profitable?”

And I’m no longer, as an adult, of a mind to think that rules that seem silly, expensive, or inconvenient are optional at my discretion. If I don’t like the rules, I just don’t go there.

I think the only place I still go where 1) outside food is prohibited 2) concessions are outrageous and 3) I will feel the need to eat is Ralph Wilson Stadium. So I just pay up. The NFL has successfully sold me its product, what can I say?

1. This sort of thing is very rare here in Canada… I have never been searched and almost always bring something in.

2. Looking for recording devices is simply a response to the bull shit marketing tactics of the movie industry as they try to have the Canadian copyright laws changed to overwhelmingly benefit them. This is a smear campaign.

3. It is illegal to carry a concealed weapon in Canada.

4. Handguns (vs long guns ie riles, shotguns) are for the most part so heavily controlled you will never see one except on a cop… or if you are very unlucky in the hands of a crook.

5. You folks who want to come up here with your concealed handguns and show everyone what rights you have… Don’t bother, you will only see the inside of a very small room with very strong bars.

6. Any business here that wants to do a search like the one described is going to get a substantial amount of bad press here. Although we Canadians are polite and tend to comply with the laws… enough of us will just as likely tell them to f…fly a kite and not comply. If that means we don’t see the movie in the theater… not a problem we can watch it online at home.

7. Why any theater would elect to piss off its customers in a world with so many other options and venues for watching movies boggles the mind. Not to mention the slow down this causes in crowded theaters.

8. Finally, note that this happened in Quebec… the one province in Canada that thinks it deserves special treatment because it has a distinct society/culture. This is the province that even scares the US when they have to deal with them. Well the point here is that lots of crazy stuff happens in Quebec… I’m happy to have them as part of the country, but sometimes I wonder if they didn’t ride the short bus to confederation.

@GreatWhiteNorth: Great post, well written and full of facts from someone who’d know.
…But why are you keeping your use of penguins as ushers at your stadium games secret? Trying to keep Yankee tourists from ruining your outdoor sports watching?

I’m pretty sure that Montreal is the original source for about 85% of pirated videos where the pirate pointed a video camera at the screen. So I’m sure there is some extra pressure in Montreal than there might be in your City, State or Province.

The fun part to note is that they’re searching for video equipment, and damaging reputations over it. However, There is ZERO evidence that camming even reduces their bottom line one cent.

For the last 18 months, I’ve been crunching box office figures going back to the mid-90s, and I’ve found no declining trend in box offices sales at all.

Ever wonder why you never see the claims for ‘piracy’ backed up, or why the studies have no methodologies, or even data included (if you didn’t know, they don’t) – It’s because there’s no evidence at all. In fact all the evidence points to ‘piracy’ increasing sales.

Like the VCR, cable TV, FM radio, even the player piano (all of which has had similar ‘industry destroying’ claims made about them), it’s about control, and money. It will cost them money and reduce their control (until they can purchase the new companies) to adapt to the new business models, so they don’t want to do it.

At the local Indie theater, Tuesday’s free popcorn night after 6PM, which suits me just fine. I go in with a large glass mixing bowl (am old fashioned and think eating popcorn out of a Tupperware bowl is sacrilege. Folks see me lugging that giant 2 quart monster up to the snack bar and -Gently- putting it on top of it (Their counter top is almost all glass, they would cry if I set it down on it with anything more than 6G’s of force), they know they are seeing a serious moviegoer.

BUT! I’m fair-minded and generous to a fault, so the kids flock around me and dip into the giant of a bowl.

Until the major chains stop using butter by default and start stocking nutritional yeast, I’m afraid we’re going to have to keep using the power of my “large purse” to enjoy the fil-ims.

We’ve managed to get through one, sometimes two large bags of homemade popcorn and a jug or two of water.. Unless we go to the independent theaters that have better selections and who we want to support with our snack-moneys, packing our food is just SOP at this point.

@veg-o-matic: heck yes. And some other yummies that aren’t HFCS laden, or really, any treat that doesn’t make my stomach recoil in terror. As a vegan, there’s virtually nothing in the case I can actually eat.

Sure, it’s my life choice, and if you don’t want to cater to me it’s ok…but if you don’t offer any options at all that I can eat, don’t be surprised when I bring my own.

@veg-o-matic: It’s urine-colored grease, unfortunately.
There’s an indie place that uses butter that I go to when I can.
I know I’d yield to temptation a lot more if they offered buttered popcorn, but in their quest to save a few pennies, they lose out on a $5 sale. (shrug)

Usually I eat before I go or afterwards. If I want popcorn, I get the child’s tray, which comes with a drink, a candy and the exact amount of popcorn I can eat. It’s still expensive but not quite so much as the Tub O’ Butter, which I could bathe a small child in.

Who cares about being searched at a theater. This probably happened because people kept sneaking food in, and leaving it there for the ushers to clean up. The ushers passed along the info to management and they tightened up. Movie theaters make their profits from selling you junk at way over marked prices…what is new ?!?!

Stuff your face before you go in to the theater, you can wait 90 mins to Re-Stuff your face, can’t YOU ?

The Real Premise of this story should have been to praise
the girl for taking birth control. Unplanned parenthood is the worst!, far worse then having your bag searched at a movie theater.

I think it’s a sad day for the Canadian justice system. I remember a time when a frivolous lawsuit like this would have been unthinkable – and if they had the nerve to bring something like this before a judge, his answer would be “Bailiff, kick this jerk in the *ss.”

Sad, really. I wonder WHERE we could have learned that SUING is a solution for every time you break the rules and want a little revenge for you tattered pride.

@Julius Seizure. (Lackey Position Avail.): They were penalized for not notifying customers in advance that they would be searched. Since you like obeying so much, you’ll enjoy my theater, where the rules state that customers must to consent whatever I choose to do them. (I apologize for the smell, it’s just my pig-farm out back)

I don’t know about “rights” or the differences between Canadian and US laws, but I do feel that for $11 (or higher!) for a ticket (NYC price) that theaters do not come anywhere close to providing an experience worth the price of admission.

In addition to teenagers rummaging through your bags, what’s with the seats directly under the screens that nobody wants to sit in but which still cost full price? The twenty minutes of adverts before the movie starts? The dirty, trash-strewn, and disgusting conditions? I wish I could get more people to join me in basically boycotting theaters. They have no incentive to clean things up when shows are sold out even with outrageous ticket and popcorn prices.

We went to a theater the other day, and their “search” consisted of them saying “empty your pockets.” They then looked at the things we put into their little tray, and let us take them back and let us in.

I felt so much safer as a result. No one was getting through that security, I tell you what.

After 9/11 the local mega-theater got really restrictive on bags in the theater. A theater which is located in a mall, no less. Women’s giant purses were fine, but backpacks and shopping bags were not.

They weren’t “allowed” to search you, even if you offered. Simply wouldn’t allow you into the theater. And this is after buying a ticket of course.

I had to go so far as to hide my school bag behind a couch in Filene’s once, and another time I bought a pair of cargo pants and shoved all my purchases into the many pockets. Strangely bulging pockets were a-okay.